0 used to describe money that someone has lost or lent and will never get back:
1 used to describe information on a computer that has been lost and cannot be found:
2 used to describe a mistake in a computer program that cannot be corrected:
If more weakly implemented, non-modal phonation may persist throughout the duration of the vowel without rendering unrecoverable concomitant tone ; sufficient articulatory compatibility is achieved.
Individuals take past unrecoverable costs into account in their decisions.
If weakly implemented however, non-modal phonation may persist throughout the duration of the vowel without rendering unrecoverable concomitant tone.
However, the relatively light implementation of non-modal phonation does not render contrastive pitch unrecoverable.
Syllable structure simplification strategies such as epenthesis thus promote recoverability and lexical distinctiveness, whereas deletion produces unrecoverable forms that foster ambiguity.
Only if language users optimize bi-directionally and take into account the hearer as a speaker will they be able to avoid unrecoverable forms.
Failure of a deferred pattern match causes an unrecoverable program error.
All staves which remain blank would have belonged to the companion composition, which only partially survives on staves 1 and 2 of the surviving fragment and is thereby unrecoverable.